This may cover a broader range of sites than maybe you are looking for, but here it is for those interested:

http://users.rcn.com/fleener/Bible_Study_Links.html

jdarlack

04-09-2004, 09:47 AM

http://www.mechon-mamre.org (http://www.mechon-mamre.org/) Site has the full text of the Mishnah, Tosefta and both the Jerusalem & Babylonian Talmud available in Unicode Hebrew! (You can even download the html files for use offline!
http://www.chassidus.ru/midrash/index.php Russian site has the entire text of the Midrash Rabbah, and the other major collections of midrash in fully searchable Unicode Hebrew!
http://www.come-and-hear.com/tcontents.html Site has some of the Soncino Talmud translation available for free, along with introductions to the the Sedarim.
http://khazarzar.skeptik.net/thalmud/index.htm Russian site with an index of many tractates from the Babylonian Talmud with links to scanned images of folios! (Accessible even if you don't have any experience with Russian, if you just pay attention to the Hebrew links on the page).
http://www.library.yale.edu/cataloging/hebraicateam/ Yale Library's "Hebraica Team" Contains various helps that would aid in research.
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/index.jsp 1901-1906 Jewish Encyclopedia Full text!
http://www.biblegateway.com/cgi-bin/webcommentary Most of the IVP New Testament commentary on-line!
http://www.bombaxo.com/other.html Useful site, includes an index to Charlesworth's Pseudepigrapha that surpasses the new "in print" index!, a cross-reference index between Brill's Context of Scripture (COS) and Pritchard's ANET.
http://rosetta.reltech.org/Ebind/docs/TC/ TC Ebind Index. This site has links to scanned images of a plethora of original documents useful for text criticism! See also http://alpha.reltech.org:8080/
http://www.ao.net/~fmoeller/qumdir.htm The complete text of the Great Isaiah Scroll in scanned images! (1QIsaA)
http://home.comcast.net/~rciampa/ A useful site developed by New Testament professor, and avid BibleWorks user, Dr. Roy Ciampa

Ivo Fasiori

04-09-2004, 01:48 PM

http://www.mechon-mamre.org (http://www.mechon-mamre.org/) Site has the full text of the Mishnah, Tosefta and both the Jerusalem & Babylonian Talmud available in Unicode Hebrew! (You can even download the html files for use offline!
[CUT]

Hi Jim!

Your link list is VERY useful!

Please, could you post more links from your bookmarks??? http://www.bibleworks.com/forums/images/icons/icon12.gif

David, thanks for the links.
Especially interested in the Old Testament Gateway! It's Aussie [pronounced Ozzie] origin is great, too!

David McKay
Bathurst,
New South Wales
Australia

MGVH

07-20-2004, 11:51 AM

I am building on the shoulders of others, including those who have provided such helpful links in this forum, but my loose collection of personal links is available at:
Bible Texts, Tools, and Study Resources (http://www.gettysburgsem.org/mhoffman/xnlinks/bibletexts.htm)

jdarlack

10-29-2004, 09:55 PM

Hello folks, I just stumbled upon a site that shows a heap of promise!

The Online Critical Pseudepigrapha project (http://www.uwo.ca/kings/ocp/index.html) is directed by Ken Penner, David Miller and Ian Scott. Thus far, they have posted the Greek text in Unicode for The Testament of Job along with a fully prepared critical apparatus; also available are Testament of Abraham and 1 Enoch-with Aramaic variants. There's an invitation for others to get involved. If you've got an interest in Second Temple Judaism, you may want to take a look.

Of course, the usefulness of the site for studying the Jewish backgrounds of the New Testament is easy to see!

The project has placed the base text files into public domain, so that means they could be incorporated into BW. Perhaps if enough BW users could help out with the apparatus, we could convince them to let us incorporate the text into BW! ...we could at least hope...

Project Description

For some time it has been evident that scholars of early Judaism and early Christianity need better access to the texts of the Pseudepigrapha in their original (or extant) languages and with a critical apparatus. In many cases critical editions are prohibitively expensive or out of print, and scholars without access to a large library have been hard pressed to find them.

The Online Critical Pseudepigrapha is intended to address this problem by publishing on-line, free-access critical texts of the Pseudepigrapha which are up-to-date and academically rigorous. This aim is to be realized by

1) co-ordinating the efforts of scholars who take on the editing of individual texts;
2) providing a forum for peer review of texts as they are developed;
3) developing the technology necessary for the publication of these texts in electronic form; and
4) providing a permanent web-site for the long-term publication of these texts and as a forum for ongoing text-critical work on the pseudepigrapha.
I reposted this message to this thread, so anyone subscribed will be able to take a look!